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Scientists have long puzzled over the ‘immunological paradox’ of pregnancy1: how does the mother tolerate the fetus — a foreign entity that carries some of the father’s DNA? In a paper in Nature, Vento-Tormo et al.2 investigate this enigma. The authors performed single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNAseq) of cells isolated from the placenta and the decidua (the lining of the pregnant uterus), and from matching maternal blood for comparison. They identified an array of cell types unique to this maternal–fetal interface, and inferred the existence of a large network of potential interactions between them that would favour immunological tolerance and nurture the growth of the fetus. The authors’ molecular atlas provides an impressive resource for future studies of pregnancy and its complications.

The early embryo develops into a structure called the blastocyst, which implants in the lining of the uterus. Implantation triggers the development of the placenta from fetal membranes. The placenta nourishes the fetus through the umbilical cord3. Abnormal placental development can lead to several complications of pregnancy, including pre-eclampsia, fetal growth restriction and stillbirth. A better understanding of human placental development is sorely needed, but there is no good animal model for this process — it has to be studied in women.Vento-Tormo et al. collected placental, decidual and blood samples from pregnancies that had been electively terminated at between 6 and 14 weeks of gestation. The authors’ scRNAseq analysis enabled them to distinguish between cells of maternal and fetal origin, because the latter include RNA sequences that are absent in the mother. This clearly revealed that cells from the fetus had migrated into the maternal decidua (Fig. 1), and that a small subset of maternal immune cells called macrophages were located in the placenta.

The blastocyst-stage embryo takes an active role in its own destiny. Cells from the outer layer of the blastocyst, called trophoblast cells, undergo differentiation. Vento-Tormo and colleagues identified the transcription factors involved in the differentiation of one type of trophoblast cell, villous cytotrophoblast (VCT) cells, into either syncytiotrophoblast cells or extravillous trophoblast (EVT) cells (Fig. 1). The authors found that VCT cells express receptors that promote differentiation and are stimulated by growth factors produced by various placental cells. EVT cells invade the decidua, where they interact with maternal white blood cells to trigger the remodelling of narrow maternal spiral arteries into wider conduits that can meet the nutritional needs of the developing fetus. The authors showed that such invading EVT cells produce a signalling protein called transforming growth factor β, which favours the development of maternal regulatory T cells — a subset of immune cells called T cells — that rein in immune responses.

The most abundant maternal immune cells in the decidua during the first trimester of pregnancy are natural killer (NK) cells4. Best known as killers of infected cells and tumour cells, NK cells assume a more peaceful role in pregnancy, secreting soluble proteins that promote maternal blood-vessel remodelling3,5. Decidual NK (dNK) cells also regulate the extent to which EVT cells can invade the decidua4. Vento-Tormo et al. identified three subsets of dNK cell — a remarkable finding, because it shows that dNK cells have evolved into specialized cells that are very different from blood NK cells. The authors’ data indicate that the immunological activity of each dNK subset is dictated by their ability to interact with both maternal and fetal cells in the decidua, with the dual outcome of promoting fetal growth and restraining immune attack on the fetal cells.The researchers’ work also reveals that the decidua’s two layers are defined by distinct molecular profiles, and contain different complements of five cell types: two types of perivascular cell, which support the maternal blood vessels, and three types of decidual stromal (dS) cell, which provide tissues with structural support. The dS cells express the protein interleukin-15, which is essential for NK-cell survival and proliferation, and ligands for two inhibitory receptors on NK cells, indicating the role of dS cells in supporting the survival of NK cells while restraining their immune function.

To analyse their very large data sets, Vento-Tormo et al. created a computational platform, CellPhoneDB, to statistically predict receptor–ligand pairs between the different cell types identified by scRNAseq. The platform is publicly available (CellPhoneDB.org) as a resource for examining gene-expression profiles of single cells and for making inferences about networks of cell–cell communication. The authors have highlighted just a few of the cellular interactions revealed by their analysis. Many more remain, and await interrogation.

There are inherent limitations to the study of human reproduction. In this case, samples from pregnancies at 6–14 weeks’ gestation were treated as equivalent. But during this time, the fetus is nourished in two distinct ways — first, by glands in the uterus that feed into the intravillous space of the placenta, and, later, by the maternal blood, which passes directly to the developing placenta6. Treating these two phases as one might obscure valuable information. Furthermore, changes that occur during earlier stages of embryo development were not examined. Obviously, systematic longitudinal analysis of in utero human development is not feasible, because of ethical issues.

A major limitation to understanding human development has been the lack of representative animal models. Vento-Tormo et al. now provide a human molecular reference against which pregnancy in animals can be analysed to find features that are shared with humans. In addition, data obtained from women with complications of pregnancy can be assessed using this resource. This could lead to the identification of biomarkers of common pregnancy complications.

By mapping the cellular and molecular terrain of the first trimester of human pregnancy, the current study illuminates how the maternal–fetal interface is a peaceful and tolerant environment in which immunological reactivity is dampened. In such a milieu, maternal and fetal cells cooperate to regulate trophoblast invasion, remodel the maternal vasculature and provide sufficient nourishment for the fetus. However, this immunological tolerance might come at a cost. For instance, the well-known vulnerability to certain infections7, such as cytomegalovirus, Zika virus and malaria-causing parasites, during this time in pregnancy could be due to restrained immune reactivity. Vento-Tormo and colleagues’ data provide a powerful framework in which to assess the landscape of early pregnancy during such devastating infections.

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Sabreena Chowdhury RakaSenior LecturerDepartment of PharmacyFaculty of Allied Health SciencesDaffodil International University